British Columbia Brings Back Electric-Car Purchase Rebates

British Columbia Brings Back Electric-Car Purchase Rebates

Yesterday, the Province of British Columbia announced the return of its Clean Energy Vehicle (CEV) incentive program, effective April 1.

The program's return was the culmination of months of behind-the-scenes efforts by electric-vehicle advocates throughout the province.

The so-called Phase 2 of the program largely restores incentives from Phase 1, which was allowed to expire in the spring of 2014 after the depletion of the initial C$14.6 million (US$12 million) allocation for vehicles and supporting infrastructure.

It should also boost electric vehicle sales, which have risen only modestly since the first phase expired, even as sales skyrocketed in Ontario and Quebec--where incentives remain.

This author's analysis showed that during the original incentive program, B.C. represented about one-sixth the combined number of Leaf and Volt sales in Ontario and Quebec. That ratio dropped to 1 in 12 after incentives expired.

Phase 2 details

The new program will be overseen by the Ministry of Energy and Mines, led by Bill Bennett.

He is unrelated to former B.C. Premier William Bennett, who began the build-out of the massive hydroelectric dams which now allow the province's electric car drivers to drive around on emission-free electricity.

British Columbia reinstates its incentives for plug-in electric car purchase, February 2015

While the inclusion of fuel-cell vehicles may exasperate some electric vehicle advocates, Vancouver is a hub for fuel cell research and development. Also, a full 30 percent of Metro Vancouver households live in multi-unit housing (condos / apartments / townhouses).

Wiring a shared garage for electric-car charging stations is not simply a technical issue, but a potentially complex negotiation among landlords, tenants, and condominium boards.

British Columbia has also allocated C$1 million in incentives to spur companies to adopt clean energy vehicles for corporate fleets, though it hasn't followed the Quebec government or Obama White House in detailing plans to start electrifying the government fleet.

An additional C$1.6 million has been budgeted for charging and hydrogen stations, and – perhaps most promisingly – half a million dollars has been reserved for research, training, and public outreach.

Fruitful advocacy

Among the many groups who worked to convince the government to restore the incentives, the efforts of the Vancouver Electric Vehicle Association stand out. (Your contributor is a member, but takes no credit for the excellent work done.)

Led by government liaison Don Chandler, VEVA's professionalism and persistence earned it an invitation to present to government staff in April 2014. A letter-writing campaign from club members and related advocacy groups followed, expressing support for restoring incentives.

Later in the year, the club worked with Electric Mobility Canada so the national organization could communicate its support for the program's return as well.

Finally, when the government opened the public consultation phase for its 2015 budget, VEVA drafted a 14-page white paper that outlined 11 measures the government could take, classified by impact, financial cost, and responsible government ministry.

Now, after these tireless efforts, British Columbia's Clean Energy Vehicle incentives are back.

NOTE: The author, who works on fuel cells, has been unable to secure permission to charge his plug-in hybrid car in his building’s shared garage.